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GEOLOGISTS RANGE

  • Geologists Range
  • Antarctic mountain range

    The Geologists Range is a mountain range about 55 km (34 mi) long, standing between the heads of Lucy and Nimrod Glaciers in Antarctica. Seen by the northern

    Geologists Range

    Geologists_Range

  • Geologist
  • Scientist who studies geology

    A geologist is a scientist who studies the structure, composition, and history of Earth. Geologists incorporate techniques from physics, chemistry, biology

    Geologist

    Geologist

    Geologist

  • Nimrod Glacier
  • Glacier in Antarctica

    flows north between the Geologists and Miller Ranges, then northeasterly between the Churchill Mountains and Queen Elizabeth Range, and finally spills into

    Nimrod Glacier

    Nimrod Glacier

    Nimrod_Glacier

  • Himalayas
  • Mountain range in Asia

    true Himalayan rivers. Some geologists refer to all the rivers collectively as the circum-Himalayan rivers. The great ranges of central Asia, including

    Himalayas

    Himalayas

    Himalayas

  • Mount Macpherson
  • Topics referred to by the same term

    Macpherson (Canada) in British Columbia, Canada Mount Macpherson of the Geologists Range in Antarctica This disambiguation page lists articles about distinct

    Mount Macpherson

    Mount_Macpherson

  • Geologist's hammer
  • Hammer used for splitting and breaking rocks

    more powerful blow. In such cases geologists may prefer a sledge or bricklayer's "club" hammer. The best geologist's hammers are forged from one piece

    Geologist's hammer

    Geologist's hammer

    Geologist's_hammer

  • Churchill Mountains
  • Mountain range in Antarctica

    south of the Britannia Range and north of the Geologists Range, Miller Range and Queen Elizabeth Range. Several of the range's highest summits, including

    Churchill Mountains

    Churchill Mountains

    Churchill_Mountains

  • Miller Range
  • Mountain range in Antarctica

    to the northeast and the Geologists Range to the northwest, both on the other side of the Nimrod Glacier. The Miller Range was part of the Mawson Continent

    Miller Range

    Miller Range

    Miller_Range

  • Front Range
  • Mountain range of the Southern Rocky Mountains of North America

    The Front Range is a mountain range of the Southern Rocky Mountains of North America located in the central portion of the U.S. State of Colorado, and

    Front Range

    Front Range

    Front_Range

  • Queen Elizabeth Range (Antarctica)
  • Mountain range in Antarctica

    direction between the Geologists Range and Miller Range, then northeasterly between the Churchill Mountains and Queen Elizabeth Range, and finally spilling

    Queen Elizabeth Range (Antarctica)

    Queen_Elizabeth_Range_(Antarctica)

  • Cascade Range
  • Mountain range in western North America

    Helens shattered the quiet and brought the world's attention to the range. Geologists were also concerned that the St. Helens eruption was a sign that long-dormant

    Cascade Range

    Cascade Range

    Cascade_Range

  • Basin and Range Province
  • Physiographic region extending through western United States and Mexico

    deformational patterns have been identified in MCCs in the Basin and Range and has led geologists to examine them as a group of related geologic features formed

    Basin and Range Province

    Basin and Range Province

    Basin_and_Range_Province

  • Outer Range
  • American science fiction neo-Western television series

    Outer Range is an American science fiction neo-Western television series created by Brian Watkins. It features an ensemble cast that includes Josh Brolin

    Outer Range

    Outer_Range

  • Isbell
  • Topics referred to by the same term

    near Fort Payne, Alabama, United States Mount Isbell, a mountain of Geologists Range, Churchill Mountains, Antarctica Bocock-Isbell House, a historic house

    Isbell

    Isbell

  • Summerson
  • Surname list

    mountain surmounting the northern end of Endurance Cliffs in the Geologists Range of Antarctica This page lists people with the surname Summerson. If

    Summerson

    Summerson

  • List of geologists
  • A geologist is a contributor to the science of geology. Geologists are also known as earth scientists or geoscientists. The following is a list of notable

    List of geologists

    List_of_geologists

  • Atlas Mountains
  • North African mountain range

    Atlas to geologists is the relatively small amount of crustal thickening and tectonic shortening despite the important altitude of the mountain range. Recent

    Atlas Mountains

    Atlas Mountains

    Atlas_Mountains

  • VXE-6
  • United States Navy Air Test and Evaluation Squadron

    December 1993, an LC-130 crashed on Lucy Glacier near Mount Isbell in the Geologists Range. The aircraft was retrieving a field party from the University of Wisconsin–Milwaukee

    VXE-6

    VXE-6

    VXE-6

  • Altai Mountains
  • Mountain range in Central–East Asia

    49°N 89°E / 49; 89 The Altai Mountains (/ɑːlˈtaɪ/ ahl-TY) are a mountain range in Central Asia, where Russia, China, Mongolia, and Kazakhstan converge

    Altai Mountains

    Altai Mountains

    Altai_Mountains

  • Rocky Mountains
  • Major mountain range in western North America

    Specimens were collected for contemporary botanists, zoologists, and geologists. The expedition was said to have paved the way to (and through) the Rocky

    Rocky Mountains

    Rocky Mountains

    Rocky_Mountains

  • List of Rhodes Scholars
  • Cecil Madigan University of Adelaide Magdalen 1911 Australia Explorer and geologist John McNair University of New Brunswick University 1911 Canada Lieutenant

    List of Rhodes Scholars

    List_of_Rhodes_Scholars

  • Alfred Hulse Brooks
  • American geologist (1871–1924)

    exploration of what became known as the Brooks Range. Alfred Hulse Brooks, the new assistant geologist and head of the Alaskan branch of the United States

    Alfred Hulse Brooks

    Alfred Hulse Brooks

    Alfred_Hulse_Brooks

  • Read Mountains
  • Mountains in Antarctica

    Shackleton Range. Photographed from the air by the U.S. Navy, 1967, and surveyed by BAS, 1968-71. In association with the names of geologists grouped in

    Read Mountains

    Read Mountains

    Read_Mountains

  • Pangean megamonsoon
  • Paleoclimatological hypothesis

    Petroleum Geologists, 17, 265-274. Francis, J.E., 2009: Palaeoclimates of Pangea- geological evidence. Canadian Society of Petroleum Geologists, 17, 265-274

    Pangean megamonsoon

    Pangean_megamonsoon

  • Galdhøpiggen
  • Mountain in Innlandet, Norway

    in Norway stayed above the ice as nunataks has been abandoned by most geologists. It fits well with the present flora in the area, but it does not fit

    Galdhøpiggen

    Galdhøpiggen

    Galdhøpiggen

  • Ardito Desio
  • Italian geologist, mountaineer and cartographer (1897–2001)

    of the National Association of Italian Geologists. He was the first president of the Italian Order of Geologists. Desio was a member of the Italian National

    Ardito Desio

    Ardito Desio

    Ardito_Desio

  • Mesabi Range
  • Mining district in northeastern Minnesota

    47.500°N 93.067°W / 47.500; -93.067 The Mesabi Iron Range is a mining district and mountain range in northeastern Minnesota following an elongate trend

    Mesabi Range

    Mesabi Range

    Mesabi_Range

  • Ansel Adams
  • American photographer and environmentalist (1902–1984)

    "pure" photography which favored sharp focus and the use of the full tonal range of a photograph. He and Fred Archer developed a system of image-making called

    Ansel Adams

    Ansel Adams

    Ansel_Adams

  • Marquette Iron Range
  • Iron ore deposit in Michigan, US

    until the present day. Marquette Iron Range is the deposit's popular and commercial name; it is also known to geologists as the Negaunee Iron Formation. The

    Marquette Iron Range

    Marquette Iron Range

    Marquette_Iron_Range

  • Ohio Range
  • Hills in the Horlick Mountains of Antarctica

    The range was investigated in 1960–61 and 1961–62 by geologists of the Institute of Polar Studies of Ohio State University, for which the range is named

    Ohio Range

    Ohio_Range

  • Coast Range Ophiolite
  • fragments show that the Jurassic Coast Range Ophiolite retains its original lithospheric coherence, meaning geologists are able to re-construct how the ophiolites

    Coast Range Ophiolite

    Coast_Range_Ophiolite

  • List of The Weekly with Charlie Pickering episodes
  • forty people worked on the makeover including engineers, architects and geologists; The Week in TV: Studio 10 (with Nick Maxwell); Ninety million sterile

    List of The Weekly with Charlie Pickering episodes

    List_of_The_Weekly_with_Charlie_Pickering_episodes

  • Temblor Range
  • Mountain range in the southern California Coastal Ranges

    Vicinity, Kern County, California." American Association of Petroleum Geologists Bulletin, 1933 (abstract available here) Allan, Stuart (2005). California

    Temblor Range

    Temblor Range

    Temblor_Range

  • Mojave Desert
  • Desert in the southwestern United States

    called unconformities, and at least one distinct set of related formations geologists call a group. The oldest rocks in the area that now includes Death Valley

    Mojave Desert

    Mojave Desert

    Mojave_Desert

  • Susan M. Landon
  • American petroleum geologist

    for female geologists. She is the recipient of 2013 John D. Haun Landmark Publication Award from American Association of Petroleum Geologists. Susan M.

    Susan M. Landon

    Susan M. Landon

    Susan_M._Landon

  • Taconic Mountains
  • Appalachian Mountain range in the United States

    Charles Lyell. Emmons died in 1863, yet as late as the 1880s two leading geologists of the era James Dwight Dana (Yale University) and Jules Marcou wrote

    Taconic Mountains

    Taconic Mountains

    Taconic_Mountains

  • List of Midsomer Murders episodes
  • List of episodes of the British TV drama series

    beneficiary. When two more murders take place, the detectives investigate a range of suspects and possible motives. 54 3 "King's Crystal" Peter Smith Steve

    List of Midsomer Murders episodes

    List_of_Midsomer_Murders_episodes

  • Franklin Mountains (Texas)
  • Small mountain range in El Paso, Texas, US

    range is part of the Franklin Mountains State Park. The mountains are composed primarily of sedimentary rock with some igneous intrusions. Geologists

    Franklin Mountains (Texas)

    Franklin Mountains (Texas)

    Franklin_Mountains_(Texas)

  • Absaroka Range
  • Mountain range in Montana and Wyoming, United States

    area. The dissection of these long extinct volcanoes by erosion allows geologists to see volcanic structures that are impossible to see in active volcanoes

    Absaroka Range

    Absaroka Range

    Absaroka_Range

  • Arthur James Boucot
  • American paleontologist

    Commission on Stratigraphy from 1986–1989. The Boucot Plateau of the Geologists Range of Antarctica was named by the Advisory Committee on Antarctic Names

    Arthur James Boucot

    Arthur James Boucot

    Arthur_James_Boucot

  • Wiedemann Range
  • Mountain range in Greenland

    range is part of the Sermersooq Municipality. The range was visited in 1932 by a team of geologists belonging to Ejnar Mikkelsen's Second East-Greenland

    Wiedemann Range

    Wiedemann Range

    Wiedemann_Range

  • Ural Mountains
  • Mountain range in Eurasia

    Ural Mountains (/ˈjʊərəl/ YOOR-əl), or simply the Urals, are a mountain range in Eurasia that runs north–south mostly through Russia, from the coast of

    Ural Mountains

    Ural Mountains

    Ural_Mountains

  • Sierra Nevada
  • Mountain range in the United States

    recent tectonic uplift. Other geologists claim that the elevations of many of the modern rivers flowing down the range are only 100–300 meters (300–1

    Sierra Nevada

    Sierra Nevada

    Sierra_Nevada

  • Herbert Mountains
  • Group of rock summits in Antarctica

    Shackleton Range. Photographed from the air by the U.S. Navy, 1967, and surveyed by BAS, 1968–71. In association with the names of glacial geologists grouped

    Herbert Mountains

    Herbert Mountains

    Herbert_Mountains

  • George Martin Lees
  • British geologist

    Lees went to swim across the Karun river and was swept away. The other geologists returned to camp. "Ah, Lees is gone," they said. As they were about to

    George Martin Lees

    George_Martin_Lees

  • Plains garter snake
  • Species of snake

    greatly reduced due to building activities and pesticide use. Its habitat range overlaps with that of the common garter snake (Thamnophis sirtalis) in many

    Plains garter snake

    Plains garter snake

    Plains_garter_snake

  • Barker Range
  • Mountain range in Victoria Land, Antarctica

    Barker Range (72°32′S 166°10′E / 72.533°S 166.167°E / -72.533; 166.167 (Barker Range)) is a mountain range trending northwest–southeast and including

    Barker Range

    Barker_Range

  • Du Toit Mountains
  • Group of mountains in Palmer Land, Antarctica

    association with the names of geologists grouped in this area, named by US-ACAN in 1988 after Dallas Lynn Peck, geologist, a world authority on igneous

    Du Toit Mountains

    Du Toit Mountains

    Du_Toit_Mountains

  • Baltic Sea anomaly
  • Indistinct sonar image of Baltic Sea floor

    rocks were transported there by glaciers," explained Brüchert. Swedish geologists Fredrik Klingberg and Martin Jakobsson say that the chemical composition

    Baltic Sea anomaly

    Baltic_Sea_anomaly

  • Pangaea
  • Supercontinent from the late Paleozoic to early Mesozoic eras

    supercontinent to have existed and was the first to be reconstructed by geologists. The name "Pangaea" is derived from Ancient Greek pan (πᾶν, "all, entire

    Pangaea

    Pangaea

    Pangaea

  • Wes Hildreth
  • American geologist (1938–2025)

    the U.S. Geological Survey as a research geologist in the same year. Hildreth's interest in the Panamint Ranges led him to return to Death Valley and the

    Wes Hildreth

    Wes Hildreth

    Wes_Hildreth

  • Radar
  • Object detection system using radio waves

    as thunderstorms, tornadoes, winter storms, precipitation types, etc. Geologists use specialized ground-penetrating radars to map the composition of Earth's

    Radar

    Radar

    Radar

  • Waiʻanae Range
  • Remains of ancient Hawaiian volcano

    youthful stage of erosion. This is considered somewhat strange by some geologists since the western part of the volcano is on the leeward side of the island;

    Waiʻanae Range

    Waiʻanae Range

    Waiʻanae_Range

  • Henry G. Ferguson
  • American geologist (1882-1966)

    assignments as a USGS employee, joined senior geologists Ferguson and Siemon Muller on a project mapping the Sonoma Range in Nevada. Roberts' work in the Battle

    Henry G. Ferguson

    Henry_G._Ferguson

  • Agafia Lykova
  • Member of the hermit Russian Old Believer Lykov family

    family's Russian Orthodox Bible. In the summer of 1978 a group of four geologists discovered the family by chance while circling the area in a helicopter

    Agafia Lykova

    Agafia_Lykova

  • American Association of Petroleum Geologists
  • Professional geological association

    The American Association of Petroleum Geologists (AAPG) is one of the world's largest professional geological societies with about 17,000 members across

    American Association of Petroleum Geologists

    American_Association_of_Petroleum_Geologists

  • Marcia McNutt
  • American geophysicist

    fitted with sensors at the Memphis VA Medical Center which is within the range of the New Madrid Seismic Zone, the most active earthquake zone in the Eastern

    Marcia McNutt

    Marcia McNutt

    Marcia_McNutt

  • Adirondack Mountains
  • Mountains in northeastern New York State, U.S.

    than the rate of denudation. The cause of the uplift is unknown, but geologists theorize that it is caused by a hot spot in the Earth's crust. A recent

    Adirondack Mountains

    Adirondack Mountains

    Adirondack_Mountains

  • North Sea oil
  • Hydrocarbons from the North Sea

    Fields of the Decade: 1968–1978. Tulsa: American Association of Petroleum Geologists. p. 39. ISBN 0891813063. AAPG Memoir 30. Swartz, Kenneth I. (16 April

    North Sea oil

    North Sea oil

    North_Sea_oil

  • Restoro d'Arezzo
  • Italian monk and scientist of the Middle Ages

    Restoro d'Arezzo (also spelled Ristoro) was an Italian monk and scientist of the Middle Ages, author of an important prose treatise in the vernacular,

    Restoro d'Arezzo

    Restoro d'Arezzo

    Restoro_d'Arezzo

  • Russel Range
  • Mountain range

    northern British Columbia, Canada. Geologist R.G. McConnell named Russel Range after his assistant, H. Y. Russel. "Russel Range". BC Geographical Names. Government

    Russel Range

    Russel Range

    Russel_Range

  • BP
  • British multinational oil and gas company

    cost the company more than $65 billion. In May 1908, a group of British geologists discovered a large amount of oil at Masjed Soleyman located in the Khuzestan

    BP

    BP

    BP

  • Alpide belt
  • Belt of Eurasian mountain ranges

    mid-19th century with the evolutionary biologists. The early historical geologists, such as Charles Darwin and Charles Lyell, arranged fossils and layers

    Alpide belt

    Alpide belt

    Alpide_belt

  • Polystrate fossil
  • Creationist term for a fossil that extends through more than one geological stratum

    several smaller ones. Geologists see no need to invoke a global flood to explain upright fossils. This position of geologists is supported by numerous

    Polystrate fossil

    Polystrate fossil

    Polystrate_fossil

  • Turbidite Hill
  • Buckley Formation at Turbidite Hill and Mount Cerberus and in the Geologists Range and Black Nunataks. The fossil peats and logs may be the oldest silicified

    Turbidite Hill

    Turbidite_Hill

  • Denise Cox
  • American petroleum geologist

    profession for geologists were in high demand. In recognizing that she would need further degrees to pursue her aspiration as a petroleum geologist, Cox enrolled

    Denise Cox

    Denise_Cox

  • Qilian Mountains
  • Mountain range in China

    mountain range was formerly known in European languages as the Richthofen Range after Ferdinand von Richthofen, who was the Red Baron's explorer-geologist uncle

    Qilian Mountains

    Qilian Mountains

    Qilian_Mountains

  • Brooks Range
  • Mountain range in Alaska, United States

    National Preserve. The range was named by the United States Board on Geographic Names in 1925 after Alfred Hulse Brooks, chief USGS geologist for Alaska from

    Brooks Range

    Brooks Range

    Brooks_Range

  • Death Valley Germans
  • Tourist family gone missing in 1996

    pass, most likely indicating Mengel Pass. A U.S. flag taken from the Geologist's Cabin in Butte Valley was discovered in the van, making it clear they

    Death Valley Germans

    Death_Valley_Germans

  • Fanny Carter Edson
  • American Geologist

    Petroleum Geologists, Bulletin of the American Association of Petroleum Geologists (2011). Fanny Carter Edson. American Association of Petroleum Geologists. pp

    Fanny Carter Edson

    Fanny Carter Edson

    Fanny_Carter_Edson

  • Michigan Geological Survey
  • "Association of American State Geologists Centennial History: 1908–2008" (PDF). Association of American State Geologists. Archived (PDF) from the original

    Michigan Geological Survey

    Michigan Geological Survey

    Michigan_Geological_Survey

  • Orestes St. John
  • American geologist and paleontologist (1841–1921)

    landscapes of Orestes St John", in Drake, Ellen T.; Jordan, William M. (eds.), Geologists and Ideas: A History of North American Geology, vol. 1, Geological Society

    Orestes St. John

    Orestes St. John

    Orestes_St._John

  • Margaret B. Fuller Boos
  • Geologist - influential actor in the study of pegmatite geology

    newly weds both went out to work for Empire Gas and Fuel as petroleum geologists. In the summer of 1928, she was offered a job as a part-time ranger-naturalist

    Margaret B. Fuller Boos

    Margaret_B._Fuller_Boos

  • Hajar Mountains
  • Mountain range in Oman and the UAE

    record is valuable to geologists. It contains the most complete ophiolite on Earth, of which it is most well known for among geologists. The ophiolite sequence

    Hajar Mountains

    Hajar Mountains

    Hajar_Mountains

  • Tyrannosaurus
  • Genus of Late Cretaceous theropod

    an island continent known as Laramidia. Tyrannosaurus had a much wider range than other tyrannosaurids. Fossils are found in a variety of geological

    Tyrannosaurus

    Tyrannosaurus

    Tyrannosaurus

  • Ring of Fire
  • Tectonic belt of earthquakes and volcanoes

    southern Asia and southern Europe). Some geologists include all of Indonesia in the Ring of Fire; many geologists exclude Indonesia's western islands (which

    Ring of Fire

    Ring of Fire

    Ring_of_Fire

  • I Survived...
  • TV documentary

    War veteran, a customer and a boy taken hostage, be shot at point-blank range in the head with a machine gun. 8 "Michelle/Troy and Josh" May 19, 2008 (2008-05-19)

    I Survived...

    I_Survived...

  • Wisconsin Range
  • Mountain range in Antarctica

    Wisconsin Range escarpment and gathered samples of granitic rock from Mount LeSchack. In 1964–65 Gunter Faure and John H. Mercer led a group of geologists from

    Wisconsin Range

    Wisconsin_Range

  • Salkhan Fossils Park
  • Fossil park in Uttar Pradesh, India

    hectares in Kaimur Range, adjacent to Kaimoor Wildlife Sanctuary. It comes under jurisdiction of the State forest department. Geologists have been aware

    Salkhan Fossils Park

    Salkhan Fossils Park

    Salkhan_Fossils_Park

  • Explorers Range
  • Large mountain range in Antarctica

    Explorers Range (70°50′S 162°45′E / 70.833°S 162.750°E / -70.833; 162.750 (Explorers Range)) is a large mountain range in the Bowers Mountains of Victoria

    Explorers Range

    Explorers_Range

  • Geology of Nevada
  • named by geologists in 1951 after Antler Peak on Battle Mountain, was an early orogeny mountain building event in the creation of the Basin and Range Province

    Geology of Nevada

    Geology of Nevada

    Geology_of_Nevada

  • Allochem
  • Identifiable grains in carbonate rocks

    American Association of Petroleum Geologists Memoir no. 77. Tulsa, Oklahoma, American Association of Petroleum Geologists. 474 pp. ISBN 0-89181-358-6 v t

    Allochem

    Allochem

    Allochem

  • Boomerang Range
  • Mountain range in Antarctica

    Antarctica. The range is curved like a boomerang, and extends generally north–south for about 25 km. It was mapped and named in 1957 by geologists in the New

    Boomerang Range

    Boomerang Range

    Boomerang_Range

  • Saudi Arabia
  • Country in West Asia

    reportedly reversed its ban on women "becoming lawyers, engineers, or geologists" and established "aggressive affirmative action programmes", doubling

    Saudi Arabia

    Saudi Arabia

    Saudi_Arabia

  • Peter Molnar (geophysicist)
  • American geophysicist (1943–2022)

    University of Colorado. His research focused on aspects of how mountain ranges form and continental lithosphere deforms. Molnar was born August 25, 1943

    Peter Molnar (geophysicist)

    Peter_Molnar_(geophysicist)

  • Human evolution
  • Evolutionary process

    ; Lewin, Roger (2001) [Originally published 2000]. Java Man: How Two Geologists Changed Our Understanding of Human Evolution. University of Chicago Press

    Human evolution

    Human evolution

    Human_evolution

  • Mount Whitney
  • Highest mountain in the contiguous United States

    Whitney (Paiute: Tumanguya) is a mountain in California's Sierra Nevada range, and is the highest point in the contiguous United States, with an elevation

    Mount Whitney

    Mount Whitney

    Mount_Whitney

  • Kaimanawa Range
  • Mountain range in New Zealand

    The Kaimanawa Range, officially called the Kaimanawa Mountains since 16 July 2020, is a range of mountains in the central North Island of New Zealand

    Kaimanawa Range

    Kaimanawa Range

    Kaimanawa_Range

  • Earth
  • Third planet from the Sun

    planets of the Solar System. It was only during the 19th century that geologists realized Earth's age was at least many millions of years. Lord Kelvin

    Earth

    Earth

    Earth

  • Che Guevara
  • Argentine revolutionary (1928–1967)

    remains, which lasted more than a year. In July 1997, a team of Cuban geologists and Argentine forensic anthropologists discovered the remnants of seven

    Che Guevara

    Che Guevara

    Che_Guevara

  • Morozumi Range
  • Mountain range in Victoria Land, Antarctica

    Range. Mapped by USGS from surveys and U.S. Navy air photos, 1960-63. The ridge was visited by NZGSAE, 1967–68, who gave the name because geologist J

    Morozumi Range

    Morozumi Range

    Morozumi_Range

  • History of metallurgy in the Urals
  • centuries, abandoned ancient mines served as a kind of indicator for geologists in search of ore. With the help of such finds, the Gumeshev and Kargalin

    History of metallurgy in the Urals

    History of metallurgy in the Urals

    History_of_metallurgy_in_the_Urals

  • Flinders Ranges
  • Mountain range in South Australia

    The Flinders Ranges are the largest mountain ranges in South Australia, which starts about 200 km (125 mi) north of Adelaide. The ranges stretch for over

    Flinders Ranges

    Flinders Ranges

    Flinders_Ranges

  • Grain size
  • Diameter of individual grains of sediment, or of lithified particles in clastic rocks

    given names in the Wentworth scale (or Udden–Wentworth scale named after geologists Chester K. Wentworth and Johan A. Udden) used in the United States. The

    Grain size

    Grain size

    Grain_size

  • Japanese Alps
  • Series of mountain ranges in Japan

    Alps (Japanese: 日本アルプス, Hepburn: Nihon Arupusu) is a series of mountain ranges in Japan which bisect the main island of Honshu. The peaks that tower over

    Japanese Alps

    Japanese Alps

    Japanese_Alps

  • Blue Ridge Mountains
  • Mountain range in the Eastern U.S.

    a physiographic province of the larger Appalachian Highlands range. The mountain range is located in the Eastern United States and extends 550 miles

    Blue Ridge Mountains

    Blue Ridge Mountains

    Blue_Ridge_Mountains

  • MacIntyre Mountains
  • Mountain in the United States

    geologist Ebenezer Emmons. Mountaineer Russell Carson applied the name to the entire range in his accounts. The earliest recorded ascent on the range

    MacIntyre Mountains

    MacIntyre Mountains

    MacIntyre_Mountains

  • Geology of Utah
  • years. Other geologists found 2.4 billion-year-old schist and gneiss in the Albion Range Green Creek Complex. Prior to the 1960s, geologists inferred the

    Geology of Utah

    Geology of Utah

    Geology_of_Utah

  • Continent
  • Large geographical region identified by convention

    some geologists. However, a study conducted in 2021 found that part of the submerged continent is indeed Precambrian, twice as old as geologists had previously

    Continent

    Continent

    Continent

  • Daniels Range
  • Mountain range of the Usarp Mountains, Antarctica

    Spur, Daniels Range. Recorded by USARP geologists C.C. Plummer and R.S. Babcock, who made a geological reconnaissance of Daniels Range in December 1981

    Daniels Range

    Daniels_Range

AI & ChatGPT searchs for online references containing GEOLOGISTS RANGE

GEOLOGISTS RANGE

AI search references containing GEOLOGISTS RANGE

GEOLOGISTS RANGE

  • Rangeevan
  • Boy/Male

    Sikh

    Rangeevan

    Firm in battle, A widow

    Rangeevan

  • Hey
  • Surname or Lastname

    English (Yorkshire)

    Hey

    English (Yorkshire) : habitational name from a place called Hey.Dutch : topographic name for someone who lived on a heath, Dutch hei, heide.German : metonymic occupational name for a grower or mower of grass, from Middle High German höu ‘grass’, ‘hay’.North German (Frisian) and Dutch : from a Germanic personal name formed with hag ‘fence’, ‘enclosure’ as the first element.South German : occupational name from Middle High German heie ‘ranger’, ‘warden’, ‘guard’ or a topographic name from Middle High German haie ‘protected wood’.

    Hey

  • Marshall
  • Surname or Lastname

    English and Scottish

    Marshall

    English and Scottish : status name or occupational name from Middle English, Old French maresc(h)al ‘marshal’. The term is of Germanic origin (compare Old High German marah ‘horse’, ‘mare’ + scalc ‘servant’). Originally it denoted a man who looked after horses, but by the heyday of medieval surname formation it denoted on the one hand one of the most important servants in a great household (in the royal household a high official of state, one with military responsibilities), and on the other a humble shoeing smith or farrier. It was also an occupational name for a medieval court officer responsible for the custody of prisoners. An even wider range of meanings is found in some other languages: compare for example Polish Marszałek (see Marszalek). The surname is also borne by Jews, presumably as an Americanized form of one or more like-sounding Jewish surnames.As the fourth chief justice of the U.S., John Marshall (1755–1835) was the principal architect in consolidating and defining the powers of the Supreme Court. He was a descendant of John Marshall of Ireland, who settled in Culpeper Co., VA, sometime before 1655.

    Marshall

  • Ranger
  • Surname or Lastname

    English

    Ranger

    English : occupational name for a gamekeeper or warden, from Middle English ranger, an agent derivative of range(n) ‘to arrange or dispose’.German : variant of Rang 2, 3.German : habitational name for someone from any of the places named Rangen, in Alsace, Bavaria, and Hesse.French : from a Germanic personal name formed with rang, rank ‘curved’, ‘bent’; ‘slender’.A person called Ranger from La Rochelle, France, is documented in Quebec City in 1684 with the secondary surname Laviolette.

    Ranger

  • Rangeet
  • Boy/Male

    Sikh

    Rangeet

    Region of battle, Handsome, Well colored

    Rangeet

  • Demers
  • Surname or Lastname

    English

    Demers

    English : patronymic from Deemer.French : habitational name apparently associated with a specific domain; the source is unclear, because of the wide range of local variants.

    Demers

  • Pamir
  • Boy/Male

    Indian

    Pamir

    Mountain range

    Pamir

  • Balch
  • Surname or Lastname

    English

    Balch

    English : from Middle English balch, belch ‘balk’, ‘beam’ (Old English bælc, balca), possibly denoting someone who lived in a house with a roof beam rather than in a simple hut; alternatively it may have been a nickname for a man built like a tree trunk, i.e. one of stocky, heavy build.English : nickname from Middle English balche, belche ‘swelling’ (Old English bælc(e)). This was probably chiefly given in the sense ‘swelling pride’, ‘overweening arrogance’, but it can also mean ‘eructation’, ‘belch’ and may therefore in some cases have been acquired by a man given to belching.Welsh : from the adjective balch, which has a range of meanings—‘fine’, ‘splendid’, ‘proud’, ‘arrogant’, ‘glad’—but the predominant meaning is ‘proud’ and from this the family name probably derives.The surname Balch was established in MD c.1650.

    Balch

  • Daghfal
  • Boy/Male

    Muslim/Islamic

    Daghfal

    Name of first Islamic geologist

    Daghfal

  • Majal
  • Girl/Female

    Arabic

    Majal

    Range; Opportunity

    Majal

  • Bow
  • Surname or Lastname

    English

    Bow

    English : metonymic occupational name for a maker or seller of bows, from Middle English bow (Old English boga, from būgan ‘to bend’). Before the invention of gunpowder, the bow was an important long-range weapon for shooting game as well as in warfare. Boga is also found as a personal name in Old English, and it is possible that this survived into Middle English and so may lie behind the surname in some instances. In other cases (for example, Richard atte Bowe, 1306), the name is topographic, from the same word in the transferred sense ‘arched bridge’, ‘river bend’, an allusion to their similarity in shape to a drawn bow.Irish : Anglicized form of Gaelic Ó Buadhaigh (see Bogue).

    Bow

  • Pamir
  • Boy/Male

    Arabic, Muslim, Pashtun

    Pamir

    Helper; Perfect; Mountain Range

    Pamir

  • Parker
  • Boy/Male

    English American

    Parker

    Keeper of the forest; forest ranger. Famous bearer: actor Parker Stevenson.

    Parker

  • Pamir |
  • Boy/Male

    Muslim

    Pamir |

    Mountain range

    Pamir |

  • Daghfal
  • Boy/Male

    Arabic, Muslim, Sindhi

    Daghfal

    Name of First Islamic Geologist

    Daghfal

  • Himalay | ஹிமாலய
  • Boy/Male

    Tamil

    Himalay | ஹிமாலய

    Mountain range

    Himalay | ஹிமாலய

  • Rangey
  • Boy/Male

    American, British, English

    Rangey

    From Raven's Island

    Rangey

  • Rangesh | ரஂகேஷ
  • Boy/Male

    Tamil

    Rangesh | ரஂகேஷ

    Lord Vishnu

    Rangesh | ரஂகேஷ

  • Wright
  • Surname or Lastname

    English, Scottish, and northern Irish

    Wright

    English, Scottish, and northern Irish : occupational name for a maker of machinery, mostly in wood, of any of a wide range of kinds, from Old English wyrhta, wryhta ‘craftsman’ (a derivative of wyrcan ‘to work or make’). The term is found in various combinations (for example, Cartwright and Wainwright), but when used in isolation it generally referred to a builder of windmills or watermills.Common New England Americanized form of French Le Droit, a nickname for an upright person, a man of probity, from Old French droit ‘right’, in which there has been confusion between the homophones right and wright.

    Wright

  • Forester
  • Boy/Male

    American, British, English, French

    Forester

    Woodsman; Forest-ranger; Surname; Occupational Name; Place Name

    Forester

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Online names & meanings

  • Zuhaira
  • Girl/Female

    Muslim/Islamic

    Zuhaira

    Courage

  • Fatahat
  • Boy/Male

    Arabic

    Fatahat

    Conquest; Victory

  • Josianne
  • Girl/Female

    French, German, Swedish

    Josianne

    Little Child; God will Increase; God has Added

  • Sali
  • Girl/Female

    Arabic, Australian, Muslim

    Sali

    Friend

  • Wicenty
  • Boy/Male

    Latin

    Wicenty

    Conqueror.

  • Rekem
  • Boy/Male

    Biblical

    Rekem

    Vain pictures, divers picture.

  • Asuya
  • Girl/Female

    Indian

    Asuya

    Envy

  • Hilari
  • Girl/Female

    British, English, Finnish

    Hilari

    Cheerful

  • Mahrosh
  • Girl/Female

    Arabic, Muslim

    Mahrosh

    Piece of Moon; Pleasant

  • Yeshaya
  • Boy/Male

    Australian, Hawaiian, Hebrew

    Yeshaya

    God Lends; God is Salvation

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Other words and meanings similar to

GEOLOGISTS RANGE

AI search in online dictionary sources & meanings containing GEOLOGISTS RANGE

GEOLOGISTS RANGE

  • Wernerian
  • a.

    Of or pertaining to A. G. Werner, The German mineralogist and geologist, who classified minerals according to their external characters, and advocated the theory that the strata of the earth's crust were formed by depositions from water; designating, or according to, Werner's system.

  • Lindia
  • n.

    A peculiar genus of rotifers, remarkable for the absence of ciliated disks. By some zoologists it is thought to be like the ancestral form of the Arthropoda.

  • Geologies
  • pl.

    of Geology

  • Neologian
  • n.

    A neologist.

  • Anglemeter
  • n.

    An instrument to measure angles, esp. one used by geologists to measure the dip of strata.

  • Zoophyta
  • n. pl.

    An extensive artificial and heterogeneous group of animals, formerly adopted by many zoologists. It included the c/lenterates, echinoderms, sponges, Bryozoa, Protozoa, etc.

  • Geologize
  • v. i.

    To study geology or make geological investigations in the field; to discourse as a geologist.

  • Geognost
  • n.

    One versed in geognosy; a geologist.

  • Pseudoneuroptera
  • n. pl.

    division of insects (Zool.) reticulated wings, as in the Neuroptera, but having an active pupa state. It includes the dragon flies, May flies, white ants, etc. By some zoologists they are classed with the Orthoptera; by others, with the Neuroptera.

  • Hoazin
  • n.

    A remarkable South American bird (Opisthocomus cristatus); the crested touraco. By some zoologists it is made the type of a distinct order (Opisthocomi).

  • Neologist
  • n.

    An innovator in any doctrine or system of belief, especially in theology; one who introduces or holds doctrines subversive of supernatural or revealed religion; a rationalist, so-called.

  • Eocene
  • a.

    Pertaining to the first in time of the three subdivisions into which the Tertiary formation is divided by geologists, and alluding to the approximation in its life to that of the present era; as, Eocene deposits.

  • Primordial
  • a.

    Of or pertaining to the lowest beds of the Silurian age, corresponding to the Acadian and Potsdam periods in American geology. It is called also Cambrian, and by many geologists is separated from the Silurian.

  • Panther
  • n.

    A large dark-colored variety of the leopard, by some zoologists considered a distinct species. It is marked with large ringlike spots, the centers of which are darker than the color of the body.

  • Moose
  • n.

    A large cervine mammal (Alces machlis, or A. Americanus), native of the Northern United States and Canada. The adult male is about as large as a horse, and has very large, palmate antlers. It closely resembles the European elk, and by many zoologists is considered the same species. See Elk.

  • Eozoon
  • n.

    A peculiar structure found in the Archaean limestones of Canada and other regions. By some geologists it is believed to be a species of gigantic Foraminifera, but others consider it a concretion, without organic structure.

  • Geologist
  • n.

    One versed in the science of geology.

  • Annulosa
  • n. pl.

    A division of the Invertebrata, nearly equivalent to the Articulata. It includes the Arthoropoda and Anarthropoda. By some zoologists it is applied to the former only.

  • Geologian
  • n.

    A geologist.

  • Neologist
  • n.

    One who introduces new words or new senses of old words into a language.